Posted by ryanderson on 4/25/2012 5:05:00 AM (view original):
Feel free to answer any or all questions. Thanks in advance. It would be most helpful if the answers were in reference to DIII, but anything would help. If any of these questions have already been asked, go ahead and send me in the right direction.
1. Is there any way, big or small, to pull down a player - other than scouting trips?
2. How often should I/do you send letters or phone calls? I understand a bulk of the $$ should be CV/HV (or ST if necessary), but how often do you send letters or phone calls? Do they count as a significant recruiting tool? Do you periodically call backups or interested players to keep them interested?
3. If pulling down a player or just talking to a player, waiting for him to drop, how early do you like to send a schollie? If you love the player, do you send it with your first recruiting effort, or since $100 is valuable at DIII, do you wait until he has dropped, or somewhere in between?
1. You can try to pull down with HV's but unless the player is extremely close to dropping already, these will be rejected and you might lose the money without getting any consideration credit for the action. The reason guys use SV's is because its an action the recruit cannot refuse and you get credit for the expenditure.
2. One phone call first cycle to see if you can get the player now, are a backup, or have no chance. One letter once I know I can get them. After that, probably never again other than the one call I make the cycle right before signing to remind them to ink their name on the dotted line. Backups will call you when they're ready to sign after you've made the initial contact, no need to phone them again.
3. The best answer here is I'll send the scholarship offer as soon as I'm convinced I WANT the player in my program. For some, that might be first or second cycle. For others, it might be only after some SV's to determine high vs. high-high in a category or two. In the grand scheme, $100 isn't a huge expense, so even if I find someone better down the line, I'm not out that much money.